The mountain does not ask. It waits—
still beneath streaks of morning light.
Pines shift like they know I am coming.
I carry the cold and begin the climb.
Yesterday falls away in pieces:
mud-caked boots, half-formed thoughts.
Granite leans in close.
Moss softens what it can.
Each breath comes sharp,
but the rhythm settles in.
I am not chasing anything.
I am only walking into the day.
Under limbs where the shadows twist,
something opens.
Not the sky. Not the path.
Something quieter. Something I left behind.
And I remember—
that first clear morning,
sun like a dare across my face,
the world wide open,
and every step saying, Go.
Later, at the Summit
It’s not what I thought.
No thunderclap,
no sudden joy.
Just wind,
and the slow rhythm
of lungs remembering air.
The view doesn’t shout.
It waits—
like the mountain did.
Still.
Knowing.
I sit with the silence,
chewing a piece of dried apple,
watching a hawk trace
the shape of something I can’t name.
Far below,
the trail threads back
through the green,
the mist,
the part of me
still arriving.
I don’t speak.
I don’t need to.
The sky
understands.